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Generative Programming and Component Engineering

Second International Conference, GPCE 2003, Erfurt, Germany, September 22-25, 2003, Proceedings

  • Conference proceedings
  • © 2003

Overview

Part of the book series: Lecture Notes in Computer Science (LNCS, volume 2830)

Included in the following conference series:

Conference proceedings info: GPCE 2003.

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Table of contents (23 papers)

  1. Domain-Specific Languages

  2. Staged Programming

  3. Invited Talk

  4. Modeling to Code

  5. Aspect-Orientation

  6. Meta-programming and Language Extension

  7. Invited Talk

  8. Automating Design-to-Code Transitions

  9. Principled Domain-Specific Approaches

Other volumes

  1. Generative Programming and Component Engineering

Keywords

About this book

This volume constitutes the proceedings of the second International Conference on Generative Programming and Component Engineering (GPCE 2003), held September 22–25, 2003, in Erfurt, Germany, sponsored by the NetObjectDays German industrial software development event, in cooperation with the ACM SIGPLAN and SIGSOFT societies. GPCE was created as an e?ort to bring - getherresearchersworkingonboththeprogramminglanguagesandthesoftware engineeringsideofprogramgenerationandcomponentengineering. Thecommon theme of program generation and component engineering is the domain-speci?c nature of both approaches. Depending on the characteristics of a domain, either a generative or a compositional technical solution may be appropriate. In just its second year, GPCE has shown a lot of promise for building a strong community. The response to the call for papers was excellent, with 62 submissions to the technical program, 2 of which were later withdrawn. Each paper received between three and ?ve reviews, many of them quite thorough and hopefully valuable to all authors. The electronic meeting allowed for - depthdiscussionsofallsubmissions,oftentoamuchgreaterextentthanpossible in a physical PC meeting. As a result, 21 papers were selected for presentation at the conference and are included in this volume, together with abstracts for the invited talks by Olivier Danvy and Peri Tarr. Of the accepted papers, 3 are co-authored by PC members (from a total of 5 PC submissions). We tried hard to ensure fairness and hold PC submissions to a high standard. The EDAS conference submission system was used to manage the paper submissions. Our EDAS installation was supported by Blair MacIntyre, who was particularlyhelpfulinresolvingtechnicalissueswiththesystem.

Editors and Affiliations

  • Carnegie Mellon University,  

    Frank Pfenning

  • Department of Computer and Information Science, University of Oregon, Eugene, USA

    Yannis Smaragdakis

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